Hill owned a roofing business that had an account at Lowe's to buy supplies. He sold the business to his employees who had used the account. When he sold the business, he asked a person at Lowe's to close the account. The account documents stated that to close the account, Hill must contact Lowe's headquarters in writing, but he did not. His former employees then ran up a bill on the account
Lowe's sued Hill for the balance due as the former employees were bankrupt. Most likely, the court would hold that Lowe's could:
a. only collect from the new owners because Hill was not a surety
b. not collect from anyone since the new owners were bankrupt and Hill was not a surety
c. collect from Hill because he was a surety on the business, even if not a surety on the Lowe's account d. collect from Hill because he had engaged in fraud in the sale of the business
e. none of the other choices
e
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Negative Metacommunications In the past few months, Rhamel has frequently called in sick to work. He has received medical treatment for a respiratory infection, but the infection continues to reoccur. He has missed several important deadlines and his
sick leave is dwindling quickly. Rhamel's supervisor has been patient and supportive through this illness, but other employees have recently been asked to handle Rhamel's work in addition to their own workload. Co-workers have started to feel resentful and this is evident in their nonverbal communication with Rhamel when he is at work. Give two examples of negative metacommunication and three examples of kinesic messages that coworkers may communicate to Rhamel that express their frustration and resentment.
Indicate the group of words or sentence with correct capitalization. Which is correct?
A) Who is the Governor of Maine? B) Who is the governor of Maine?
A company that sells multiple products will always set sales prices such that all products have the same contribution margin
Indicate whether the statement is true or false
What is the formula to calculate P/E ratio??
A. ?Market price per share ÷ Book value per share B. ?Earnings available to common stockholders (EAC) ÷ Number of shares C. ?Common dividends ÷ Number of shares D. ?Market price per share ÷ Earnings per share E. ?Average cost of funds × Invested capital